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Jenny ScottCenter for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition
U.S. Food & Drug Administration
Food Safety Developments – Implications for Nuts
The U.S. has a problem with Salmonella
•
7,444 infections•
16.2 infections/100,000 population
•
US population = 308,496,776•
~50,000 cases a year (X 38=1.9 million)
•
40% of people ≥
50 are hospitalized•
1.3% of people ≥
50 die
Preliminary 2008 FoodNet
Data
Sources of Salmonellosis•
Foods of animal origin–
Meat, poultry, eggs, seafood
•
Foods of plant origin–
Fresh produce
•
Cross contamination –
foodservice, home•
Human-to-food transmission
•
Human-to-human transmission•
Animals to humans
Determining Outbreaks•
Salmonellosis
is reported to state health
departments•
Salmonella isolates are serotyped
and
analyzed by PFGE•
PulseNet
looks for matches
PFGE-XbaI PFGE-BlnI PFGE-XbaI-pattern
EXHX01.0224
EXHX01.0125EXHX01.1205
PFGE-BlnI-pattern
EXHA26.0536
EXHA26.0570EXHA26.0684
Courtesy of Christine Keys, FDA
Average weekly number of Salmonella clusters under investigation, CDC, 2008-2009
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar
Num
ber o
f clu
ster
s
Courtesy David Warnock, CDC
Infections with the outbreak strain of Salmonella
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
5/17 5/31 6/14 6/28 7/12 7/26 8/9 8/23 9/6 9/20 10/4 10/18 11/1 11/15 11/29 12/13 12/27 1/10
Onset DateEstimated Onset
Investigations of Clusters•
Shot-gun questionnaires–
Foods eaten
–
Travel–
Pet exposures
•
More focused questionnaires when common foods, sources appear
•
Case-control studies•
PulseNet
matches with isolates from food
items
Recent Salmonella outbreaks linked to Peanuts and Peanut Butter
Year Product implicated Salmonella Serovar Country
1996 Peanut butter S. Mbandaka Australia
1996 Peanut-flavored maize snack S. Agona Multiple a
2001 Peanuts S. Stanley, S. Newport Multiple
b
2006-07 Peanut butter S. Tennessee US
2008-09 Peanut butter, peanut butter-
containing products
S. Typhimurium US, Canada
c
a
Including UK, US, and Israel.b
Including Australia, Canada, and UK.c
One case was reported in Canada.
Data adapted from Scott et al., 2009
Recent Salmonella outbreaks linked to Tree Nuts
Year Product implicated Salmonella Serovar Country
2000-01 Raw almonds S. Enteritidis US, Canada
2003-04 Raw almonds S. Enteritidis US, Canada
2005-06 Raw almonds S. Enteritidis Swedena
aSuspected
Isolation of Salmonella from NutsNut / Nut Products Serovar
Almond Enteritidis
[+34, Danyluk
et al., 2007]
Cashew Mbandaka, Weltevreden
Hazelnut Thompson, Typhimurium
Macadamia nut pending
Peanut Altona, Mbandaka, Tennessee, Typhimurium, Livingstone, Newport, Senftenberg, Lexington
Pecan Anatum, Typhimurium, Hadar, Javiana, Newport, Panama, Kentucky, Sandiego
Pistachio Montevideo, Cubana, Senftenberg, Newport
Courtesy of Dave Melka, FDA
Prevalence and Numbers of Salmonella in Nuts
•
Expected to be low, but data lacking•
Almonds (Danyluk
et al., 2007. J Food Prot. 70:820-827)
–
0.87% of 9,274 samples –
1.2 -
2.9 MPN/100g
•
Brazil nuts; mixed nuts (Little et al., 2010. Food Micro.
27:171-174)
–
0.4% of 469 samples; 0.9% of 105 samples–
<0.01-0.23/g
Low Numbers Can Cause Illness
Year Serovar CFU/g Product
2006-07 S. Tennessee 0.1-1 Peanut butter
2000-01 S. Enteritidis 0.07-0.10 almonds
Infections with Salmonella Serovar X
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
5/17 5/31 6/14 6/28 7/12 7/26 8/9 8/23 9/6 9/20 10/4 10/18 11/1 11/15 11/29 12/13 12/27 1/10
PFGE 1PFGE 2
Characteristics of Salmonella in Foods
•
Growth in foods–
Temperature: from 5.2°C to 46.2°C
–
pH: from 3.8 to 9.5–
aw
: from 0.94 to >0.99
•
Heat resistance in foods–
Wide strain-to-strain variation
–
Dependent on pH, aw
, and food matrix
•
Freezing is not effective in eliminating Salmonella from foods
•
Salmonella survives long periods of dehydration
Heat Resistance of SalmonellaSalmonella Serovar Product Water Activity Temperature
(°F)D-value
(min)S. Typhimurium Chocolate Syrup 0.83 150 3.2
S. Typhimurium Salt solution 0.42 248 8.9
S. Typhimurium Salt solution 0.31 248 10.6
S. Typhimurium Milk Chocolate ? 158 816
S. Typhimurium Milk Chocolate ? 194 75
S. Enteritidis Almonds –
oil roasted ? [<0.65] 250 0.85
S. Enteritidis Almonds -
blanched ? [<.65] 158 1.0
Data adapted from Chen et al.,
2009
Thermal Inactivation of Salmonella
Data from Li Ma et al., 2009. J. Food Protect. 72:1596 –
1601.
Peanut Butter
Peanut Butter Processing•
Heating of peanut butter at 190º
F for
less than 30 min is not sufficient to kill large populations (5 log CFU/g) of Salmonella in highly contaminated peanut butter.
Heat resistance of Salmonella on Nuts
•
Heat resistance at low water activity–
Because heat resistance of Salmonella increases with reduction of water activity, the ability to destroy Salmonella on nuts is complicated by the low water activity of nuts.
•
Dry Heat is less effective than moist heat–
Nevertheless, the ability to destroy Salmonella on nuts during roasting is dependent on the moisture status at the surface of the nut, not the humidity of the bulk air.
Survival in Peanut Butter•
5 serotype composite (Agona, Michigan, Montevideo, Enteritidis, Typhimurium)
•
Stored at 5°C or 21°C•
With an inoculum
of 5.7 log CFU/g, after 24 weeks
–
at 21°C, log reduction was 4.1-4.5–
at 5°C, log reduction was 2.9-4.3•
With an inoculum
of 1.5 log CFU/g, after 24 weeks
–
6 of 7 products stored at 5°C were positive for Salmonella–
6 of 7 products stored at 21°C were negative for Salmonella
Burnett et al. 2000. J. Appl. Microbiol. 89:472-477
Survival on Pecans•
In-shell pecans–
S. Senftenberg
775W and S. Anatum
survived > 8
weeks, S. Typhimurium
>32 weeks at 21°C–
Less reduction at lower temperatures (5, -7 and -
18°C)•
Pecan halves–
S. Senftenberg
775W and S. Typhimurium
survived > 16 weeks, S. Anatum
>32 weeks at 21°C
–
Only slight reduction at lower temperatures (5, -7 and -18°C)
Beuchat and Heaton. 1975. Appl. Microbiol. 29: 795-801
Survival on Almonds
•
Salmonella Enteritidis
PT 30•
8, 5, 3 and 1 log CFU/almond
•
Stored at 23ºC•
0.25 log reduction per month
•
Salmonella was still detected after 161 days•
At 4ºC and –
20ºC, no significant reduction
of 7-8 logs of Salmonella after 550 days
Uesugi et al. 2006. J. Food Protect. 69: 1851-1857
Challenges with Salmonella and Nuts
•
Nut processing is a dusty environment – easy to spread Salmonella on dust
particles•
Nut processing facilities are relatively dry environments where Salmonella can survive
•
The introduction of water can allow Salmonella in the environment to multiply, enhancing the potential for contamination
Challenges with Salmonella and Nuts
•
Not all nuts are treated with a kill step.•
When nuts do receive a kill step, strict controls to prevent recontamination are not always in place.
•
There has been limited validation of kill steps.
Salmonella kill steps•
A process validated for one nut does not necessarily apply to another.
•
Nut roasters are generally not designed to “pasteurize”
nuts in a controlled and
verifiable way.–
Lack of data on actual product time-
temperature profiles–
Improved designs are needed for dry nut roasting equipment
FDA Activities•
As a result of contamination of nuts with Salmonella in 2009, FDA issued an assignment to the field to inspect nut processing facilities in FY 2010.
•
The assignment includes environmental monitoring to assess the potential for nut contamination from the environment.
Customer Testing•
Customers of nuts to be used without a kill step, e.g., trail mix, cereal, are testing.
•
There have been Salmonella positives that have led to nut recalls.
Why the continuing problem?
•
Lack of understanding of the ecology of Salmonella
•
Lack of understanding of the risks from Salmonella in low-moisture foods
•
Lack of understanding of the factors that increase the risk from Salmonella in low-moisture foods
The Nut Industry is Responding
•
Almond Board of CA –
Almond Action Plan•
American Peanut Council –
Good
Manufacturing Practice and Industry Best Practices for Peanut Product Manufacturers
•
GMAa
–
Industry Handbook for Safe
Processing of NutsaAPC, CA Pistachio Research Board, Peanut and Tree Nut Processors Assoc. Western Pistachio Assoc., numerous nut companies and food manufacturers
Congress is Responding•
Food Safety Enhancements Act of 2009 (HR 2749)
•
Food Safety Modernization Act (S 510)
Food Safety Enhancement Act (FSEA) Provisions
•
Requires each food facility to: –
conduct a hazard analysis;
–
implement preventive controls; and –
implement a food safety plan.
FSEA Provisions
•
Preventive Controls:–
Sanitation procedures and practices
–
Training (supervisor, manager and employee hygiene)
–
Process controls–
Allergen control program
–
GMPs–
Supplier verification activities
FSEA Provisions•
Food Safety Plan must include scientific/technical validation that the system of controls will prevent, eliminate or reduce hazards to an acceptable level.
•
FDA would have access to all records relating to determining whether a food may be adulterated or misbranded.
FDA is revising its GMPs•
“Food CGMP Modernization –
A focus on
Food Safety”
(2005)•
White Paper available at: http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dockets/0 4n0230/04n-0230-rpt0001-vol4.pdf
White Paper: Opportunities for Modernization (1)
•
Require appropriate training for supervisors and workers (now only recommended)–
Food hygiene
–
Food protection–
Employee health and personal hygiene
Easily understood Easily understood
Maintain record of trainingMaintain record of training
White Paper: Opportunities for Modernization (2)
•
Require an allergen control plan for facilities using major food allergens–
Training of processing and supervisory personnel
–
Segregation of allergens (storage and handling)–
Validated cleaning procedures
–
Prevention of cross contact during processing–
Product label review
–
Label usage and control–
Supplier control program (ingredients and labels)
White Paper: Opportunities for Modernization (3)
•
Require written environmental pathogen control program for facilities producing RTE foods that support growth of Listeria monocytogenes–
Microbiological monitoring
–
Records•
Judge effectiveness of program
•
Identify root cause of sanitation failures•
Document corrective actions
White Paper: Opportunities for Modernization (4)
•
Require that food processors develop and maintain written sanitation procedures, at a minimum, for all food contact equipment and food contact surfaces–
Management responsibility
–
Monitoring, corrective action, record keeping
White Paper: Opportunities for Modernization (5)
•
Obtain further comments on removing the exclusion from cGMP
compliance
for establishments engaged in harvesting, storage, and distribution of raw agricultural commodities
White Paper: Opportunities for Modernization (6)
•
Require that food processors maintain certain critical records and that these be made available for review and evaluation by FDA investigators to confirm compliance with GMPs.
The Bottom Line•
The nut industry will face new requirements sooner rather than later.
•
It would be prudent for nut processors to develop and implement appropriate, validated controls for hazards such as Salmonella.
•
Don’t wait for new laws and regulations.•
Don’t wait for an outbreak of illnesses to make necessary changes.
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